Fixes#16725
When using `@reference "tailwindcss";` inside a separate CSS root (e.g.
Svelte `<style>` components, CSS modules, etc.), we have no guarantee
that the CSS variables will be defined in the main stylesheet (or if
there even is one). To work around potential issues with this we decided
in #16676 that we would emit all used CSS variables from the `@theme`
inside the `@reference` block.
However, this is not only a bit surprising but also unexpected in CSS
modules and Next.js that **requires CSS module files to only create
scope-able declarations**. To fix this issue, we decided to not emit CSS
variables but instead ensure all `var(…)` calls we create for theme
values in reference mode will simply have their fallback value added.
This ensures styles work as-expected even if the root Tailwind file does
not pick up the variable as being used or _if you don't add a root at
all_. Furthermore we do not duplicate any variable declarations across
your stylesheets and you still have the ability to change variables at
runtime.
## Test plan
- Updated snapshots everywhere (see diff)
- New Next.js CSS modules integration test
This PR replaces `@variant` with `@custom-variant` for registering
custom variants via your CSS.
In addition, this PR introduces `@variant` that can be used in your CSS
to use a variant while writing custom CSS.
E.g.:
```css
.btn {
background: white;
@variant dark {
background: black;
}
}
```
Compiles to:
```css
.btn {
background: white;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
.btn {
background: black;
}
}
```
For backwards compatibility, the `@variant` rules that don't have a body
and are
defined inline:
```css
@variant hocus (&:hover, &:focus);
```
And `@variant` rules that are defined with a body and a `@slot`:
```css
@variant hocus {
&:hover, &:focus {
@slot;
}
}
```
Will automatically be upgraded to `@custom-variant` internally, so no
breaking changes are introduced with this PR.
---
TODO:
- [x] ~~Decide whether we want to allow multiple variants and if so,
what syntax should be used. If not, nesting `@variant <variant> {}` will
be the way to go.~~ Only a single `@variant <variant>` can be used, if
you want to use multiple, nesting should be used:
```css
.foo {
@variant hover {
@variant focus {
color: red;
}
}
}
```
When your Vite or postcss project has multiple Tailwind CSS roots with
different configs, they should not influence each other (with the
exception of the same candidates being used).